Technical Collaboration to Strengthen and Expand Capacity to Detect, Prevent, Respond and Mitigate the Effects of Public Health Threats of National and Global Importance with the Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) in the Kingdom of Thailand

CDC is working through its strong partnerships to increase global health impact and assure the implementation and evaluation of public health programs will result in the prevention and control of diseases and subsequently apply the knowledge gained to other settings.

The Thailand MoPH is the key

stakeholder to enable CDC to execute its global health strategies and other public health priorities in Thailand and the Southeast Asia region.

Over the past several years, a variety of public health approaches implemented by CDC and Thailand MoPH have successfully prevented new infections, improved care and treatment of existing diseases, and strengthened the capacity to collect and use surveillance data.

Despite advances, major challenges still persist.

Over the past four decades, Thailand has undergone significant social, economic, and demographic changes.

Demographic changes have resulted in an increasingly aging population structure, as well as increased exposure to non-communicable disease (NCD) risk factors, such as poor diet, sedentary lifestyle, tobacco consumption and harmful use of alcohol.

The top three causes of deaths (cardiovascular disease (CVD), cancer, and injury) in Thailand are all NCDs.

Infectious diseases continue to be serious public health issues impacting Thailand and the Mekong region-extending globally as more people travel.

Overall HIV incidence has decreased, but incidence and prevalence remain high among key populations, particularly men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender (TG) women and sex workers in larger urban areas.

An estimated 2. 4 million migrants live in Thailand.

Migrants and other mobile populations have less access to healthcare and bear a higher burden of diseases of public health importance such as TB and malaria, posing increasing strain on health systems.

Emerging infectious diseases such as COVID-19 can easily spread across international borders, with continued efforts needed to enhance early detection and support control measures to prevent pandemics.

The ability to achieve HIV epidemic control in Thailand is constrained by a health system that does not provide an integrated continuum of HIV prevention, HTC, care, treatment of HIV and co-infections (tuberculosis, sexual transmitted infections, hepatitis infections), and support services that respond to the needs of PLHIV including priority populations ((PPs) such as, MSM, TG and and People Who Inject Drugs (PWID)) and their partners.

Overcoming this requires implementation of standards for innovations in HIV prevention, same-day, high-quality, patient-friendly HTC including offline to online HTC, index testing and self-testing, with immediate referral of PLHIV and priority populations to care and initiate same-day/rapid ART, promote retention to treatment and continuity of care, targeting PPs in priority provinces, accompanied by greater capacity of health care workers (HCWs) and laboratory staff to implement, monitor and continuously improve these HIV services.

In addition, systemic public health responses should be established to control new infections in priority areas where PLHIV with recent infections are identified.

Reducing the burden of disease and improving public health in Thailand requires a multifaceted approach.

In the next five years, this umbrella cooperative agreement will facilitate collaboration within CDC and across the Thailand MoPH, emphasize the critical role of multi-sector and regional collaboration in core domains of public health to avoid duplication of effort and produce sustainable improvements in areas of public health importance for both the United States and Thailand.
Related Programs

Global AIDS

Department of Health and Human Services


Protecting and Improving Health Globally: Building and Strengthening Public Health Impact, Systems,

Department of Health and Human Services


Agency: Department of Health and Human Services

Office: Centers for Disease Control - CGH

Estimated Funding: $47,500,000


Who's Eligible


Relevant Nonprofit Program Categories





Obtain Full Opportunity Text:
Full announcement

Additional Information of Eligibility:
Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) in the Kingdom of Thailand The award ceiling for this NOFO under Section B.

CDC will consider any application requesting an award higher than this amount as non- responsive and it will receive no further review.

Full Opportunity Web Address:
https://ojjdp.ojp.gov/funding/fy2021/O-OJJDP-2021-105001

Contact:


Agency Email Description:
ztc9@cdc.gov

Agency Email:


Date Posted:
2021-05-05

Application Due Date:


Archive Date:
2021-08-04


Ganesh Natarajan is the Founder and Chairman of 5FWorld, a new platform for funding and developing start-ups, social enterprises and the skills eco-system in India. In the past two decades, he has built two of India’s high-growth software services companies – Aptech and Zensar – almost from scratch to global success.






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